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Home > Sports News > Other Sports News > Article > Dutee allowed to take part in Asian Cships in June

Dutee allowed to take part in Asian C'ships in June

Updated on: 01 April,2015 07:18 AM IST  | 
PTI |

Promising Odisha sprinter Dutee Chand got a massive shot in the arm after the Court of Arbitration for Sports in Switzerland specifically allowed her to take part in the Asian Championships, pending a final decision on her appeal against IAAF's hyperandrogenism policy

Dutee allowed to take part in Asian C'ships in June

Dutee Chand

New Delhi: Promising Odisha sprinter Dutee Chand got a massive shot in the arm after the Court of Arbitration for Sports in Switzerland specifically allowed her to take part in the Asian Championships, pending a final decision on her appeal against IAAF's hyperandrogenism policy.

Dutee Chand
Dutee Chand 


Dutee has been given the go ahead only for the June event in China and will have to sit out of other continental or international events. It is learnt that the Athletics Federation of India, which is also a party in the landmark case before the CAS in Lausanne alongwith the IAAF, has got a communication from its
parent world athletics body that Dutee can take part in the Asian Championships to be held in Wuhan, China from June 3-7.


"Pending a final decision from the CAS, Dutee Chand has been allowed to take part in national events and the Asian Championships to be held in China. She is not eligible to take part in any other continental and international events as of today till the case at the CAS is decided," a letter from the IAAF to AFI said.


The appeal hearing against the IAAF's hyperandrogenism policy, which bars female athletes having higher level of male hormones from competitions, ended in Lausanne on March 26 and a decision is expected in the next few months. The 19-year-old Dutee was disqualified last year by the AFI as per IAAF's hyperandrogenism policy after tests revealed that her body produced natural levels of testosterone above permissible range.

She has a condition called hyperandrogenism and her body produces natural levels of testosterone so high to place her in the male range in the eyes of international track and field. In December last year, the CAS, in an interim order, allowed Dutee to take part in domestic events.

She took part in the January 31-February 14 National Games in Kerala and won a gold in women's 100m dash. At the CAS hearing, Dutee's counsels included some well known international experts like James Bunting and former Justice of the Canadian Supreme Court Morris Fish. Dr Payoshni Mitra, a research consultant on gender and sports issues, who has been working with Dutee, also accompanied her in Lausanne. The Sports Ministry bore the cost of Dutee's legal battle at the CAS.

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